Yang Hak-seon

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Yang Hak-Seon
Korea London Yang Hakseon 02 (7771945238).jpg
Personal information
Full nameYang Hak-Seon
Nickname(s)The God of Vault
Country represented South Korea
Born (1992-12-06) December 6, 1992 (age 29)
Gwangju, South Korea
Height1.61 m (5 ft 3 in)
DisciplineMen's artistic gymnastics
Eponymous skillsYang
Yang Hak-seon
Hangul
양학선
Hanja
梁鶴善
Revised RomanizationYang Hak-seon
McCune–ReischauerYang Hak-sŏn

Yang Hak-seon (Korean양학선; Hanja梁鶴善 ; born 6 December 1992) is a South Korean artistic gymnast who specialises in the vault. He is the first South Korean gymnast to win an Olympic gold medal.

Personal life[]

According to his Olympic profile, Yang started his gymnastics career at the age of 9, following his brother's footsteps.[1]

Yang is currently attending the Korea National Sport University.[2]

Yang's parents are Yang Gwan-gwon and Ki Suk-hyang.[3] Their impoverished family previously lived in one of Gwangju's shantytowns, before relocating to North Jeolla Province's Gochang, in South Korea's countryside, in 2010, after his father, a construction worker, suffered from serious injuries.[3] His family currently lives in a makeshift converted greenhouse constructed from PVC pipes.[2] After Yang's father lost his job, Yang supported the family with a modest income from the Korea Gymnastic Association.[4] Yang's coach Cho Sung-doe admitted that he had been unaware of the family's precarious financial situation before Yang won the gold medal.[4]

Career[]

Yang placed fourth and just missed medaling in the individual vault final at the 2010 World Championships in Rotterdam, and would later become vault champion at the 2010 Asian Games and then 2011 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Tokyo, Japan. In 2012, he became the first Korean gymnast to win Olympic gold in gymnastics, winning the vault competition in London.[3] In 2013, he went on to win gold in vault at the 2013 Summer Universiade in Kazan, Russia. He is famous in the gymnastics world for performing one of the five hardest vaults in the world, the Yang Hak Seon, which is a front handspring on and into three twists off in a layout position. It was unveiled in the individual vault final at the 2011 World Championships, and initially carried the highest ever difficulty score (D-score) of 7.4 in men's vault at the time under the 2009-2012 Code of Points (CoP). The difficulty value of the Yang Hak Seon has been adjusted at the beginning of subsequent quads since, initially down to 6.4 under the 2012-2016 CoP and now further to 6.0 under the current 2017-2020 CoP. The International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) regularly reassesses and adjusts D-scores (typically down) due to the steady advancement of general skill levels over time in gymnastics, especially on vault because of its D-scores being assigned numeric values instead of alphabetical representations like with the other apparatuses—vault is the only apparatus in gymnastics to have that simply due to the nature of the apparatus. Yang is additionally said to be working on a second difficult vault, but this one is a sideways entry.[5]

Yang was a reigning world champion, having won gold in vault at both the 2011[6] and 2013 World Championships in Tokyo and Antwerp respectively.[7] However, at the 2014 World Championships in Nanning, China, he fell on both of his vaults—the first for which it was announced in Nanning that he was widely expected but failed to received naming credit for a brand new top then 6.4 difficulty vault, initially dubbed the Yang Hak Seon 2, or a straight Tsukahara with 3½ twist—failing to defend his title and finished in seventh place with a final average combined score of 14.416 after qualifying in first place. Without any worthy competition, Ri Se Gwang of North Korea won the gold medal with two top then 6.4 difficulty vaults that were both named after him, the Ri Se Gwang (full-twisting double Tsukahara) and Ri Se Gwang 2 (double front piked with ½ twist), and outscored Yang by exactly one full point (15.416). He was similarly unable to defend his Olympic title at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro due to injury. At the 2017 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Montreal, Canada, Yang had "qualified" (Q) in first place for the vault event final but pulled out after that because he had sustained a hamstring injury during qualifications. Unimpeded and with little resistance, Kenzo Shirai of Japan won his world individual vault title with an averaged combined score of 14.900 ahead of vault's 2012 Olympic bronze medalist Ihor Radivilov of Ukraine by 0.001, the absolute slimmest of margins.

At the 2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Stuttgart, Germany, Yang had qualified for the individual vault event final in first place, but finished eighth after falling out of the first vault—his own the Yang Hak Seon on vault, or front handspring (layout) triple twist—as well as incurring a 0.300 penalty for stepping out-of-bounds because of that.

Yang's training and preparation for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, were adjusted for his performance to peak accordingly for one year due to 2019–20 COVID-19 pandemic. At the Olympics, he failed to qualify automatically for the individual event finals on vault after placing ninth in qualifying due to the poor execution and penalty point received in his second vault. He became the first reserve for the finals but ending up not competing.

In the 2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Kitakyushu, Japan, Yang qualified for the individual vault apparatus finals in a tie for the highest average combined score of 14.833 with but ranked second to Nazar Chepurnyi of Ukraine after the tie-breaking procedure was applied. However, Yang completed the event in fifth place after some weak execution on his second vault once again.

Competitive history[]

Year Competition(s) Team All-Around FX PH SR VT PB HB
2010
World Championships 4
Asian Games 1st place, gold medalist(s)
2011
World Championships 1st place, gold medalist(s)
2012
Olympic Games 1st place, gold medalist(s)
2013 Summer Universiade 1st place, gold medalist(s)
World Championships N/A 1st place, gold medalist(s)
2014 Asian Games 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
World Championships 7
2015 Summer Universiade 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
2017
World Championships N/A Q
2019
World Championships 8
2021
Olympic Games 9
World Championships in Kitakyushu, Japan 5

Eponymous skills[]

Apparatus Name Description Difficulty Notes
Vault Yang Hak Seon front handspring layout triple twist 6.0 Originated in the vault final at the 2011 Worlds as MAG’s hardest vault at that time.

The difficulty above is in line with the 2017–2021 Code of Points. Yang currently shares the honour with only Kenzō Shirai and Hidenobu Yonekura, both of Japan, and Ri Se Gwang of North Korea for having at least one of the five skills with the highest D-score of 6.0 in men’s vault under the FIG’s most current 2017–2021 Code of Points to be named after them. The Yang Hak Seon is a front handspring (forwards) entry family vault (as opposed to all of Shirai’s vaults belonging to the Yurchenko or round-off [backward] entry family), and it has a front handspring take off (forwards) entry onto the vaulting platform and then into a triple-twisting layout off the platform to finish in a blind landing. The straight forward-entry Tsukahara with 3½ twist (or Kasamatsu with 2½ twist), now Yonekura, was the latest to be verified after it was successfully completed by Hidennobu Yonekura of Japan at the 2019 World Cup in Melbourne. Currently, the Ri (retired in 2020) owns two while Yang, Shirai and Yonekura own one each. Even though some may refer to the Yang Hak Seon vaults by just using Yang’s surname, it is not quite accurate. This is because Yang’s surname, like in Korean and Chinese names, is not customarily listed at the end; hence, Yang’s entire name in customary order must officially be used in the naming of any skill he has originated. Although a gymnast may have officially received naming credit for a skill, it is becoming more common for that name not to necessarily be used in practice. This is in light of the ever increasing number of eponymous skills across all events for MAG as well as identical corresponding skils for WAG, which would receive an official second name as well. Moreover, using eponymous names is getting more confusing outside of experts in the field. Therefore, technical abbreviations are also extensively used over official names when describing certain skills for them to be more readily understood by everyone. For example, the Yonekura is more widely just called "Tsukahara 3½" as the latter is easier to identify by more people. Also, the "2½-twisting Yurchenko" has two official names: the Shewfelt for MAG and Amanar for WAG. The latter is more popular in practice, and confusion has occurred depending on which situation the skill is being described.

References[]

  1. ^ "Hak Seon Yang". Athlete overviews. London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  2. ^ a b [런던] 양학선 꿈 자란 비닐하우스 들여다보니 '울컥'. Nate News (in Korean). NATE. 7 August 2012. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Kang Seung-woo (August 7, 2010). "Korean gymnast rises from poverty". The Korea Times. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  4. ^ a b Kwon, KJ; Alexis Lai. "Gymnastics Olympics 2012: Yang Hak-seon, South Korean gold gymnast, vaults from rags to riches". CNN. Archived from the original on 2012-08-12. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  5. ^ Sport Chosun (October 6, 2013). "'도마의신'양학선 세계체조선수권 2연패,적수 없었다(in Korean)". Naver.
  6. ^ S (October 6, 2013). "Exciting showdown at Tokyo Worlds". Tokyo2011.fig-gymnastics.com.
  7. ^ S (October 6, 2013). "South Korea's Yang wins men's vault title at gymnastics worlds". Nampa.org.

External links[]

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